
Crowley and Hurley give Munster the perfect start at Keady-Tassagh
Crowley's power gave him the edge over Tyrone's Eogan McVeigh in the boys U18 final. Twice he led by close to two bowls, but McVeigh rallied strongly in the final third. It was not enough to derail Crowley who is really maturing in his score management.
Emma Hurley was tested too by Ellie-May Carr in the girls U18 final. She took a while to stamp her authority on the score, but once she did, she looked awesome at times.
Carr kept pressing down to a brilliant purlicue around the last bend, which put Hurley in a sticky spot. She dealt with that with total calm, with two calculated perfect bowls.
Crowley's temperament was put under the microscope from the off as his first bowl was called. He didn't flinch, he responded with an equally good effort. McVeigh beat that by three metres, in what would be his only lead.
He was too wide with his next two and found himself a bowl down to Crowley's third. Crowley was close to two ahead after his fifth past Twyman's corner. McVeigh brought the lead under a bowl with a brilliant bowl up Gallogly's height.
This became the narrative for much of the score, McVeigh knocking the bowl, Crowley raising it again and threatening to push clear. Crowley was almost two in front again after ten over McGeown's height.
McVeigh closed the gap and saw it extend, till he finally got serious traction with a great 16th bowl past McKee's wall. He followed with another good bowl to the bridge. Crowley now had just 58m odds facing up the hill towards the line.
McVeigh's gains were squandered when he got a poor shot up the hill. Crowley hit back with a monster bowl that beat the line and gave him victory by a bowl of odds.
In the girls U18 final, Carr took the battle to Hurley winning the first three shots. Hurley won her first lead with a great fourth shot over McGeown's height. She pushed her lead out to 50m with her next one, but she could not break clear of a very tenacious Carr.
She finally gained a big lead with her ninth past Twynam's cottage. Carr was back in it after her bowl past Twynam's corner. Hurley moved up the gears and raised a bowl at the bus stop.
Carr made a valiant effort to turn the tide with a beautifully measured purlicue around the last bend. Hurley closed with two perfectly measured bowls, the first out under the hedge to full light, which kept her lead close to a bowl. She then sent a sizzling bowl down the hill past the line to seal it.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Daily Mirror
26 minutes ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Meath v Dublin LIVE updates from All-Ireland Ladies Football final
Meath take on Dublin this afternoon in the final of the Ladies All-Ireland football Championship. Croke Park is the venue for today's massive clash, which gets underway at 4:15pm. The game can be watched live on TG4 and can be streamed on the TG4 Player/website. Meath are back in the All-Ireland final for the first time since they won their second title on the spin in 2022. Their victory a year earlier came at Dublin's expense, which saw them deny the Dubs a fifth title on the spin. Kerry took home the title in 2023 before Dublin got back on top a year later, and the Dubs are no doubt desperate to avenge that loss of 2021 and beat their fearsome rivals. DUBLIN: Abby Shiels; Jess Tobin, Leah Caffrey, Niamh Donlon; Sinéad Goldrick, Martha Byrne, Niamh Crowley; Éilish O'Dowd, Hannah McGinnis; Nicole Owens, Carla Rowe (capt), Orlagh Nolan; Hannah Tyrrell, Niamh Hetherton, Kate Sullivan. MEATH: Robyn Murray; Áine Sheridan, Mary Kate Lynch, Katie Newe; Aoibhín Cleary (capt), Sarah Wall, Karla Kealy; Orlaith Sheehy, Marion Farrelly; Megan Thynne, Niamh Gallogly, Ciara Smith; Emma Duggan, Vikki Wall, Kerrie Cole. Oisin Doherty 'I probably didn't see it last November, December, to be back in with Meath this year. 'So, for me, I've just enjoyed this year so much. Even when results haven't been going our way, or when we wouldn't have been happy with things, like driving to training every day and all that stuff, I've still just been really grateful to be here, and just really lapping it up and enjoying it with the girls. 'I don't know whether I'm a bit more present than in other years or something but I suppose, for me, that's probably a little bit different.'


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Second-half flurry sees Louth claim TG4 All-Ireland Junior title
Kate Flood kicked four points at Croke Park on Sunday as Louth held off a stubborn challenge from Antrim to claim a record fourth TG4 All-Ireland Junior Football Championship title. It was the Ulster side who initially hit the ground running in GAA HQ with team skipper Bronagh Devlin superbly drilling a third-minute penalty into the roof of the Louth net after Theresa Mellon was adjudged to have been fouled inside the square off a Maria O'Neill free that dropped short. Mellon followed up with a fine point for the Saffrons and even though Louth, who lost to Fermanagh in last year's junior decider, eventually opened their account through Aoife Russell, Omolara Dahunsi reinforced Antrim's early authority by splitting the posts at the opposite end. Dahunsi also found the range in response to back-to-back points from Louth corner-forwards Russell and Ceire Nolan, but in the temporary absence of Bronagh Devlin for a yellow card offence, the Wee County cut their deficit to the bare minimum with impressive contributions from Flood and Shannen McLaughlin. Although Antrim sharpshooter O'Neill was on target not long after Devlin's return, unanswered points by captain Aine Breen and the ever-dependable Flood (two) ensured Louth brought a 0-8 to 1-4 cushion into the interval. Antrim were still very much in the reckoning, however, and the team jointly-managed by Chris Scullion and Michael Devlin were back on level terms with a second point from O'Neill three minutes into the second period. This effort squeezed O'Neill ahead of Hannah Tyrrell in the race for the ZuCar Golden Boot – in advance of the Dublin star's appearance in the TG4 All-Ireland senior football championship final later in the afternoon – but centre-forward Eimear Byrne was on hand to restore Louth's slender lead on 38 minutes. An outstanding score from the increasingly-influential Flood left Louth two points to the good moving into the final-quarter and they were a step closer to another junior crown when Breen and substitute Mia Duffy added points in the 47th and 49th minutes respectively. Lucy White subsequently increased Louth's cushion and even though a late surge from Antrim produced three points on the bounce by Ana Mulholland, Mellon and O'Neill (a goal-bound effort that was deflected over the bar), the Wee County ultimately prevailed in the end. Antrim: M O'Neill 0-3 (1f), B Devlin 1-0 (pen), T Mellon, O Dahunsi 0-2 each, A Mulholland 0-1. Louth: R Lambe Fagan; R Beirth, E Hand, E Murray; H Lambe Sally, S McLaughlin (0-01), L Byrne; A Breen (0-02), A Halligan; L White (0-01), E Byrne (0-01), S Matthews; A Russell (0-02), K Flood (0-04), C Nolan (0-01). Subs: M Duffy (0-01) for Matthews (42), L Collins for Russell (56), G McCrave for Lambe Sally, Z Sweeney for White (both 59). Antrim: A Devlin; N McIntosh, M Blaney, M Mulholland; S O'Neill, C Brown, C McKenna; A Mulholland (0-01), A Tubridy; T Mellon (0-02), M O'Neill (0-03, 1f), Aoife Kelly; B Devlin (1-00 pen), O Dahunsi (0-02), L Agnew. Subs: A Turley for Tubridy, A Monaghan for Kelly (both 39), B Nic Cathail for Agnew (47), N Jones for B Devlin, Aine Kelly for McKenna (both 56).


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Louth defeat Antrim to claim Wee County's record fourth junior title
All-Ireland women's junior football final: Louth 0-13 Antrim 1-8 Kate Flood kicked four points at Croke Park as Louth held off a stubborn challenge from Antrim to claim a record fourth All-Ireland junior football championship title. It was the Ulster side who initially hit the ground running, with captain Bronagh Devlin superbly drilling a third-minute penalty into the roof of the Louth net after Theresa Mellon was adjudged to have been fouled inside the square off a Maria O'Neill free that dropped short. Mellon followed up with a fine point for the Saffrons and even though Louth, who lost to Fermanagh in last year's junior decider, eventually opened their account through Aoife Russell, Omolara Dahunsi reinforced Antrim's early authority by splitting the posts at the opposite end. Dahunsi also found the range in response to back-to-back points from Russell and Ceire Nolan, but during the temporary absence of Bronagh Devlin for a yellow card offence, the Wee County cut their deficit to the bare minimum with impressive contributions from Flood and Shannen McLaughlin. READ MORE Bronagh Devlin celebrates scoring a goal for Antrim from a penalty. Photograph: Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile Although Antrim sharpshooter O'Neill was on target not long after Devlin's return, unanswered points by captain Áine Breen and the ever-dependable Flood ensured Louth brought a 0-8 to 1-4 cushion into the interval. Antrim were still very much in the reckoning, however, and were back on level terms with a second point from O'Neill three minutes into the second period, but Eimear Byrne was on hand to restore Louth's slender lead on 38 minutes. An outstanding score from the increasingly-influential Flood left Louth two points to the good moving into the final-quarter and they were a step closer to another junior crown when Breen and substitute Mia Duffy added points. Lucy White subsequently increased Louth's cushion and even though a late surge from Antrim produced three points on the bounce from Ana Mulholland, Mellon and O'Neill's goal-bound effort that was deflected over the bar, the Wee County ultimately prevailed. LOUTH: R Lambe Fagan; R Beirth, E Hand, E Murray; H Lambe Sally, S McLaughlin (0-1), L Byrne; A Breen (capt, 0-2), A Halligan; L White (0-1), E Byrne (0-1), S Matthews; A Russell (0-2), K Flood (0-4), C Nolan (0-1). Subs: M Duffy (0-1) for Matthews (42 mins), L Collins for Russell (56), G McCrave for Lambe Sally, Z Sweeney for White (both 59). ANTRIM: A Devlin; N McIntosh, M Blaney, M Mulholland; S O'Neill, C Brown, C McKenna; A Mulholland (0-1), A Tubridy; T Mellon (0-2), M O'Neill (0-3, 1f), Aoife Kelly; B Devlin (capt, 1-0 pen), O Dahunsi (0-2), L Agnew. Subs: A Turley for Tubridy, A Monaghan for Kelly (both 39 mins), B Nic Cathail for Agnew (47), N Jones for B Devlin, Aine Kelly for McKenna (both 56). Referee: K Corcoran (Mayo).